We hope that you enjoy this
newsletter and that
it helps you to get more out of your website. Please pass this
newsletter on to your friends.

Best regards,

1. Are the tweets
about your company positive, negative, or neutral?

Chances are that people are talking about your
company and your products on Twitter. Are their comments positive,
negative, or neutral? The Social Network Monitor in our
web-based Internet marketing tool SEOprofiler helps
you to to react quickly to customer comments.

Step
1: specify the words that you want to monitor:

Enter the keywords, brand names, company names,
etc. that you want to monitor. You can also monitor blogs that are
related to your business.

Step 2: see
who's talking about your company and your products

In addition to Twitter, the social media inbox
monitor also enables you to monitor your favorite blogs. You can answer
all posts by clicking the "Reply" link in the Social Network Monitor in
SEOprofiler.

It's easy, it's fast and it's efficient.

Find
the most important posts quickly and easily

You can find the most popular tweets by sorting
them by the amount of retweets or favorites. You can also filter
messages that contain particular keywords, get the messages from people
who have the most followers, sort the messages by sentiment and find
particular authors.

The comprehensive filters in the social media
inbox monitor help you to do this as efficiently as possible.

More
than social networks: a complete website promotion tool

The Social Network Monitor is only one of many
powerful website promotion tools that you get with SEOprofiler. If you
haven't done it yet, try it now:

"We emailed
Google as we saw the complaints to get a response, but Google did not
respond to our inquiry as of yet. However, I did see Google’s John
Mueller, who is tasked with webmaster communication, respond to the
inquiry on Twitter saying “I suspect it’ll be back.” Meaning, John
Mueller of Google thinks this is a weird bug and Google will fix the
/ncr feature in the upcoming days or weeks."

"The
company's spending on European lobbying has increased from just
€600,000 in 2011 to nearly €4 million ($4.3 million) last year. That's
more than Apple, Facebook, Yahoo, Twitter and Uber combined, but less
than the search giant's arch-rival, Microsoft."